Detecting Kinase Activities from Single Cell Lysate Using

Jul 15, 2014 - Very recently, it is demonstrated that a microfluidic probe can lyse single adherent cells and capture the contents to perform single-c...
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Open Access on 07/15/2015

Detecting Kinase Activities from Single Cell Lysate Using Concentration-Enhanced Mobility Shift Assay Lih Feng Cheow,† Aniruddh Sarkar,† Sarah Kolitz,‡ Douglas Lauffenburger,‡ and Jongyoon Han*,†,‡ †

Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and ‡Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States S Supporting Information *

ABSTRACT: Electrokinetic preconcentration coupled with mobility shift assays can give rise to very high detection sensitivities. We describe a microfluidic device that utilizes this principle to detect cellular kinase activities by simultaneously concentrating and separating substrate peptides with different phosphorylation states. This platform is capable of reliably measuring kinase activities of single adherent cells cultured in nanoliter volume microwells. We also describe a novel method utilizing spacer peptides that significantly increase separation resolution while maintaining high concentration factors in this device. Thus, multiplexed kinase measurements can be implemented with single cell sensitivity. Multiple kinase activity profiling from single cell lysate could potentially allow us to study heterogeneous activation of signaling pathways that can lead to multiple cell fates.

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of these assays is that adherent phenotypes such as morphology, and individual cell migration behaviors cannot be correlated with their biological activities. Furthermore, these methods rely on either special fluoregenic substrates8 that cannot be used for multiplexed detection or phosphospecific antibody methods7 that do not necessarily reflect the actual enzyme activity. A more accurate approach that would provide crucial information about the kinetics and state of the signal transduction network is the direct kinase activity assay, which measures the ability of kinases to catalyze phosphorylation of a target protein or peptide. Currently, the most advanced methods for single cell kinase activity measurement involve imaging live cells that are genetically encoded for a substrate molecule that can report the activity changes within the cytoplasm.9,10 These live-cell imaging methods could yield spatiotemporal information about kinase activation; however, they are limited in the number and types of enzymes that can be measured simultaneously in single cells. In addition, expressing a reporter molecule involves laborious genetic engineering of a cell line to encode a fluorescent protein, and could alter the normal function of the cell. An alternative strategy that has been developed involves microinjecting fluorescent kinase substrates into single cells, lysing them and performing capillary electrophoresis (CE) to separate and quantify the phosphorylated and unphosphorylated substrates.11−13 It is possible to perform simultaneous measure-

inases are an important family of proteins that regulate the majority of cell signaling pathways. They transmit information by catalyzing the phosphorylation of a specific substrate, thus modulating its activity. Interactions of multiple kinases in the signal transduction network lead to different outcomes in response to stimuli, which affects cell fate. Due to their importance in cell decision processing, there is tremendous interest in measuring cellular kinase activity levels. Recent studies have found that many anticancer drugs kill most but not all the cells in a tumor, often resulting in relapse of cancer.1,2 It has been proposed that nongenetic cell-to-cell variability in protein activity, among other things, lead to this different response to drugs.1 As most conventional techniques provide only a population-averaged measurement of the signals within the regulatory pathway, they do not reflect an accurate picture of a heterogeneous population of cells being in different states of intracellular processing.3−5 Analysis of the overall changes in phosphorylation of population of cells may also miss cellular subpopulations that are in different signaling states due to the asynchronous nature of the response.6 To address the issues related to cellular heterogeneity in signal transduction, one would need measurements of various kinase activities at the single cell level. Microfluidic systems provide great potential and promise for analyzing single cell molecular content with an unparalleled speed, accuracy and throughput. Confinement in microchambers has been shown to increase the effective concentrations of target biomolecules and enable ultrasensitive detection of intracellular proteins from single cells.7,8 However, these methods require cells to be detached into suspension prior to analysis, an event which could activate many signaling pathways and perturb the biochemical process to be studied. Another major drawback © 2014 American Chemical Society

Received: March 27, 2014 Accepted: July 15, 2014 Published: July 15, 2014 7455

dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac502185v | Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 7455−7462

Analytical Chemistry

Article

Figure 1. (a) Ion selective membrane creates a local ion depletion zone with high electric field upon applying a voltage. (b) Unphosphorylated and phosphorylated peptide substrates are different in terms of their electrophoretic mobilities (additional charge), therefore they continuously concentrate at different locations in the electrokinetic concentration device where the peptide electric force balance the electroosmotic flow, (c) With increasing recombinant Akt concentration, the fluorescence intensity of the phosphorylated substrate peak increases while the fluorescence intensity of the unphosphorylated substrate peak decreases.

microinjection or genetic modification, and (4) ability to simultaneously measure several kinase activities within the same cell. We expect the platform that we described to be an important tool that would complement the existing single cell kinase assay methods.

ments of several enzymes within the same cell due to the separation capability of CE. In both kinase activity assays described above, substrate specificity is an issue because there is significant substrate cross-reactivity among intracellular kinases. In addition, intracellular kinase substrate reporters could be subjected to other cellular processes such as proteolysis and dephosphorylation during intracellular kinase reaction,11 thus obfuscating the actual activity of the target kinase. Very recently, it is demonstrated that a microfluidic probe can lyse single adherent cells and capture the contents to perform single-cell kinase activity assay.14 This device is readily applicable to existing cells on a standard tissue culture plate; however, it remains a challenge to scale up for high throughput, multiplex single cell kinase activity measurements. Apart from cell handling, novel phenomena in microfluidics have been exploited to enable ultrasensitive detection modalities. We have previously described a concentration-enhanced mobility shift platform in a microfluidic device that can amplify signals in homogeneous electrophoretic assays.15 Here we report that this platform can be applied to simultaneously measure multiple kinase activities from single adherent cells. The increased sensitivity of the concentration-enhanced mobility shift platform allows for detection of kinase activities from single cell lysate even upon dilution into a much larger reaction chamber. The strength of this platform include: (1) the ability to directly measure kinase activities from adherent cells without detaching them (2) improved reaction specificity by addition of off-target kinase inhibitors and various protease and phosphatase inhibitors to the lysate (3) do not require



EXPERIMENTAL SECTION Details of the microchip operation, peptide synthesis and buffer recipes are included in the Supporting Information. Recombinant Kinase Activity Assays. Varying concentrations of 0.5 μL recombinant kinase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) was mixed with 4.5 μL of the premixed assay buffer (Buffer A supplemented with 1 μM substrate, please refer to the Supporting Information for buffer recipes) and incubated at room temperature for 60 min. After 1 h of incubation, 1 μL of the reaction mixture was diluted in 99 μL of Buffer B and 30 μL of this final sample was loaded into each sample reservoir of the microfluidic device. The results of the assay were taken at the end of 15 min of electrokinetic concentration. Substrate crossreactivity measurements were performed as described in the Supporting Information. Bulk Cell Lysate Kinase Activity Assays. Bulk cell lysate was prepared as described in the Supporting Information. Assay buffer (Buffer C with 4 μM PKC inhibitor, 4 μM calmidazolium, 1 μM fluorescent substrate peptide, 1 mM DTT; for Akt and MK2, 0.4 μM PKI-tide, 5 μM GF109203X; for PKA, 5 μM GF109203X) was prepared in bulk and 18 μL volumes were aliquoted into separate microcentrifuge tubes. To begin each reaction, 10% (v/v) lysis buffer (Buffer D) or lysate 7456

dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac502185v | Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 7455−7462

Analytical Chemistry

Article

platform is the ability to continuously concentrate and separate the peptide substrates from the entire sample channel over the experiment duration, leading to increasing detection sensitivity with time. Development of Recombinant Kinase Activity Assay. We first performed an experiment with recombinant Akt and its fluorescent peptide substrate Crosstide (5-FAMGRPRTSSFAEG). Recombinant enzyme assays were conducted as described in the Experimental Section. As shown in Figure 1c, two distinct bands corresponding to the phosphorylated (left) and unphosphorylated substrate (right) were formed in each sample channel during 15 min of preconcentration. The fluorescence intensities of these bands increased linearly with time. The fraction of phosphorylated substrate for each sample can be extracted by dividing the total fluorescence intensity of the phosphorylated substrate band by the total fluorescence intensity of both bands. The average kinase reaction rate can be directly calculated from these multiplexed measurements without any need for calibrations. There could be variations in the exact locations of the substrate bands as they depend on a delicate balance of hydrostatic pressure, electric field, position and condition of the nafion membrane as well as electroosmotic flow due to microchannel surface. However, because the assay is ratiometric, variation in band position and external influences such as light intensity do not affect calculation of the phosphorylation fraction. Figure 2a showed a dose response curve for the recombinant Akt assay. The limit of detection (LOD) for recombinant Akt was calculated to be 1 ng/mL (16.9 pM). To demonstrate the general applicability of this assay, separate experiments were performed with recombinant MK2 and PKA with their respective fluorescent peptide substrates, MK2tide and Kemptide (MK2: 5-FAM-AHLQRQLSIA, PKA: 5-FAM-LRRASLG). Except for new substrates, the recombinant MK2 and PKA assay was done with the same conditions as the recombinant Akt experiment. From the dose response curve in Figure 2a, the LODs for recombinant MK2 and PKA were 1.2 ng/mL (24.5 pM) and 0.7 ng/mL (16 pM), respectively, within 15 min of electrokinetic concentration. To qualitatively assess the substrate specificity of our kinase of interest, the pairwise cross-reactivity between each substrate and kinase was measured as described in the Supporting Information. From Figure S1 (Supporting Information), the degree of substrate phosphorylation is greatest when a kinase reacts with its target substrate (Kemptide for PKA, Crosstide for Akt, MK2tide for MK2). However, this assay also detected a small amount (